Stephen Covey Leaves a Legacy

“Most of us spend too much time on what is urgent and not enough time on what is important.” – Stephen Covey

Stephen Covey passed away yesterday, July 16th, 2012. He was 79. The legacy of Stephen Covey will live on. His ideas have shaped leadership, management, and personal development in profound ways.

Covey’s legacy will live on through the books he’s written, the knowledge he has shared with the world, and the lives he has impacted.

Stephen Covey Used Habits to Change Lives

I remember the day my Dad said I just had to listen to Stephen Covey. He was all excited about the idea of principles as a way to guide your life. My Dad told me, briefly, that rather than any gimmicks or techniques, Stephen Covey used simple habits to help you change what you’re getting in life. My Dad gave me an example with, “Seek First to Understand, Then to Be Understood.” I didn’t really get it, but I was intrigued.

Since my Dad had previously told me to listen to Tony Robbins, I was curious who this new hero was. (Aside — listening to Tony Robbins helped me go from #4 from the bottom in a class of 297 to #3 at the top, so I was a fan.)

Stephen Covey Shared Truths for Personal Effectiveness

His voice had passion and enthusiasm, but it was very down to Earth. He was like a masterful bard plucking truths from the universe, and sharing them one-on-one as a friend.

Stephen Covey’s 7 Habits of Highly Effective People

I immediately adopted Stephen Covey’s 7 Habits:

Habit 1: Be Proactive

Habit 2: Begin with the End in Mind

Habit 3: Put First Things First

Habit 4: Think Win-Win

Habit 5: Seek First to Understand, Then to Be Understood

Habit 6: Synergize

Habit 7: Sharpen the Saw

At work, I practiced the habits.

The mash up of the habits was more like a mindset. I liked dreaming up the “End in Mind”. I liked to “Be Proactive.” I drove from an abundance mentality and always looked for the “Win-Win”. I embraced the idea of “Seek First to Understand” so much that I would often forget whatever I had planned to say. I relentlessly prioritized to “Put First Things First.”

I found synergy and ways to “Synergize” in the work that people already did, by simply connecting dots, lining things up, and leveraging existing workflows. And my favorite habit was “Sharpen the Saw.”

I had a passion for learning and I knew that the only way to keep up or get ahead, would be to invest in myself for the long haul.

I wanted more.

Stephen Covey’s Principle-Centered Leadership

Next, I listened to Stephen Covey’s Principle-Centered Leadership. Principle-Centered Leadership is effectively a long-term, inside-out approach to developing people and organizations.

Principle-Centered Leadership was where I first got exposed to the difference between command and control management and principle-centered leadership. In command and control, you tell people what to do with rules. With principle-centered leadership, you provided guidelines that empower people to make good decisions.

Stephen Covey Taught Us to Focus on Principles (vs. Rules)

In Principle-Centered Leadership, I also learned the distinction between “rules” and “principles.” With rules, you needed an answer for every situation (“We have a rule for this” or “We have a policy for that.”)

With principles, you established a small set of principles that serve as a guide for choices and behavior, much in the same way that strategy guides tactics. The beauty of principles is that they help people stay flexible and creative in resolving problems. Also, rather than just sticking to way things have always been done, principles help people focus on objectives and what they are trying to achieve. It’s focusing on “the spirit of the law” vs. “the letter of the law.”

Stephen Covey’s 8th Habit

My leadership approach at work is very much principle-centered. I put a strong focus on empowerment, and lifting others up. I like to see people grow their greatness. Speaking of which …

I make it a mission at work to help folks find their unique combination of strengths and to give their best where they have their best to give.

Stephen Covey Taught Us to Think About the Whole Person

I was lucky enough to meet Stephen Covey a few years back when he spoke at Microsoft. I was awe-struck by his presence. He had a tone, a cadence, and a passion in his voice that was well beyond what you run into day to day. It was a highlight for me in so many ways, and I found myself learning many new insights, and revisiting old ones.

I learned empathic listening at a deeper level. For the first time, it really stuck. Rather than listen until you think you heard someone, you listen until “they feel they’ve been heard.” Big difference. I learned to think way more deeply about the impact of shifting from industrial age work to the knowledge worker age.

I learned how to think about the whole person.

Stephen Covey Encouraged Us to Empower People

Overall, it was a day of deep learning and deep reflection. (Note — If you want a deeper dive into what I learned from that session, you can read my lessons learned from Stephen Covey.)

Yes, Stephen Covey leaves us. But it’s not that he leaves us, it’s what he’s left behind. It’s what he created during this life time. He leaves a lasting legacy that has forever shaped ideas around how we invest our time, focus on what’s important, empower people, and lift each other up.

9 COMMENTS

Yes, two of my earliest influences on personal development were also Stephen Covey and Tony Robbins.
I’m sad I never got the chance to meet him in person, but his ideas and ideals continue to live on. May his soul rest in peace.

[…] too. But Covey’s teachings should not be put on the back burner,” Susan Young writes.3. Stephen Covey Leaves a Legacy. Sources of Insight: “Yes, Stephen Covey leaves us. But it’s not that he leaves us, it’s […]

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